Stat::lsMode generates mode and permission strings that look like
the ones generated by the Unix ls -l command. For example, a
regular file that is readable by everyone and writable only by its
owner has the mode string -rw-r--r--. Stat::lsMode will either
examine the file and produce the right mode string for you, or you
can pass it the mode that you get back from Perl's stat call.
WWW: http://search.cpan.org/dist/Stat-lsMode/

Change the way Perl modules are installed, update the default Perl to 5.18.
Before, we had:
site_perl : lib/perl5/site_perl/5.18
site_perl/perl_arch : lib/perl5/site_perl/5.18/mach
perl_man3 : lib/perl5/5.18/man/man3
Now we have:
site_perl : lib/perl5/site_perl
site_arch : lib/perl5/site_perl/mach/5.18
perl_man3 : lib/perl5/site_perl/man/man3
Modules without any .so will be installed at the same place regardless of the

Stat::lsMode generates mode and permission strings that look like the ones
generated by the Unix ls -l command. For example, a regular file that is
readable by everyone and writable only by its owner has the mode string
-rw-r--r--. Stat::lsMode will either examine the file and produce the right
mode string for you, or you can pass it the mode that you get back from Perl's
stat call.